Mind you, I think his insistence on staying away from the computer radically restricts what he can do if he is into song creation. Programs like Ableton Live take the looper/synth/DAW into areas that even the Korg Chord Looper can't even come close to touching. I am just not sure why some are so technophobic about computers on the one hand, yet determined to do basically the same thing on a hardware keyboard that makes the exact same task 100 times harder...
my friend, I have used computers to record music with, for about 10 years. Ableton, Cubase, Band in a Box...etc....been there, done that.
Many people say that 'things on a DAW are easier'. I don't agree.
First off, Ableton is not an arranger. It's more or less like an hi-tech synth workstation. I want an arranger, because it's the best instrument to try, with immediate response, song structures, new progressions, etc etc.
There is no comparison.....
There are so many other reasons....would take me hours to list them all.
I am not against computers, but let me say it, they are far from inspiring.
All the zillions options that there are in all these software programs, are not necessary, in many cases they are in fact useless, and distract from the main goal, to write music.
Also, keyboard arrangers are very educative. Just the other day I was studying one of the styles in my keyboard, 'sci-fi march' which is clearly inspired by the Star Wars soundtracks.
It was a blast just to try stuff with it and analyze the orchestration. I have got a music lesson out of it, and it didn't feel like a chore.
Maybe I have associated to the computer a feeling of dread, I don't know. I know that if I only have my computer, and I want to practice or write music, I tend to procrastinate. With my keyboard, I just switch it on and within seconds I am lost in another world.
The thing about these instruments is that they are built by people who understand what making music is all about.
You record something. With my keyboard, if I want to replace a set of badly played notes, I just set it to 'punch in' as soon as I play the first note, and punch out with the pedal. It's so simple and direct.
With Cubase, you have to drag lines and click on so much crap, that by the time you do it, it just makes me feel like making music is a chore.
Also, all the distractions. It's hard to make music on the computer and still not checking your email every 15 minutes. This sort of thing.
I use the computer only after I finished to write the music on my keyboard, by importing it as a midi file in Cubase and substituting all the sounds with the ones from my sample libraries (and if it were not for the sample libraries, I would not use a computer for music, at all).
But I don't write the music directly on the computer. Anyways, that's just me.
What has been said here about the 'chord track' on the Korg, is interesting. I am pretty sure I checked out the manuals for most recend Korg arrangers, and didn't find anything about the 'chord track' but I will have a better look. If that's the case, I might prefer the Korg , as the sequencer in the Tyros is a bit too underspecced for me, although I am learning to work around it's limitations.